Embryonic and Early Larval Development of the Pacific Razor Clam (

AbstractThe Pacific razor clam, Siliqua patula (Sugpiaq: Cingtaataq, Dixon, 1789), is vital to commercial, recreational, and subsistence fisheries across the Pacific Northwest Coast of North America. Despite the species' status as one of the most popular shellfish species harvested in the Pacif...

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Published in:The Biological Bulletin
Main Authors: Alcantar, Marina W, Hetrick, Jeff, Ramsay, Jacqueline, Kelley, Amanda L
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Atypon 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1086/730784
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38976852
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spelling ftpubmed:38976852 2024-09-15T18:38:08+00:00 Embryonic and Early Larval Development of the Pacific Razor Clam ( Alcantar, Marina W Hetrick, Jeff Ramsay, Jacqueline Kelley, Amanda L 2023 Oct https://doi.org/10.1086/730784 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38976852 eng eng Atypon https://doi.org/10.1086/730784 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38976852 Biol Bull ISSN:1939-8697 Volume:245 Issue:2 Journal Article 2023 ftpubmed https://doi.org/10.1086/730784 2024-07-09T16:02:00Z AbstractThe Pacific razor clam, Siliqua patula (Sugpiaq: Cingtaataq, Dixon, 1789), is vital to commercial, recreational, and subsistence fisheries across the Pacific Northwest Coast of North America. Despite the species' status as one of the most popular shellfish species harvested in the Pacific Northwest, British Columbia, and Alaska, its larval development has never been fully characterized. Generating a developmental times series, and describing development fully, is crucial for guiding targeted management, developing a mariculture strategy for the species, and providing a more pointed avenue for studies examining the response of S. patula to ocean change. This study presents the first photographic documentation of larval development in S. patula, including the timing of key transitions during embryogenesis and early larval development. Scanning electron microscopy revealed that the larval shell forms via a concretion, a process typically documented in early gastropod development. This novel characterization is pertinent, as it conveys the need for the inclusion of alternative bivalve development processes, such as a concretion, in bivalve research. This study also compared development in S. patula to a global assortment of bivalve species, including two other members of the Pharidae family, determining that the timing to D-veliger and trochophore stages was similar to the majority of bivalves surveyed. While bivalve response to climate change is a topic of great interest, not all species of concern have undergone comprehensive developmental assessments, a requisite benchmark for designing climate change studies that examine early life history sensitivity to such changes. This research supports the use of comprehensive developmental studies as prerequisites for designing climate change experimentation, establishes the necessity of high-magnification and high-resolution scanning electron microscopy within developmental assessments, and provides information about the development of a cornerstone bivalve species. Article in Journal/Newspaper sugpiaq Alaska PubMed Central (PMC) The Biological Bulletin 245 2 57 67
institution Open Polar
collection PubMed Central (PMC)
op_collection_id ftpubmed
language English
description AbstractThe Pacific razor clam, Siliqua patula (Sugpiaq: Cingtaataq, Dixon, 1789), is vital to commercial, recreational, and subsistence fisheries across the Pacific Northwest Coast of North America. Despite the species' status as one of the most popular shellfish species harvested in the Pacific Northwest, British Columbia, and Alaska, its larval development has never been fully characterized. Generating a developmental times series, and describing development fully, is crucial for guiding targeted management, developing a mariculture strategy for the species, and providing a more pointed avenue for studies examining the response of S. patula to ocean change. This study presents the first photographic documentation of larval development in S. patula, including the timing of key transitions during embryogenesis and early larval development. Scanning electron microscopy revealed that the larval shell forms via a concretion, a process typically documented in early gastropod development. This novel characterization is pertinent, as it conveys the need for the inclusion of alternative bivalve development processes, such as a concretion, in bivalve research. This study also compared development in S. patula to a global assortment of bivalve species, including two other members of the Pharidae family, determining that the timing to D-veliger and trochophore stages was similar to the majority of bivalves surveyed. While bivalve response to climate change is a topic of great interest, not all species of concern have undergone comprehensive developmental assessments, a requisite benchmark for designing climate change studies that examine early life history sensitivity to such changes. This research supports the use of comprehensive developmental studies as prerequisites for designing climate change experimentation, establishes the necessity of high-magnification and high-resolution scanning electron microscopy within developmental assessments, and provides information about the development of a cornerstone bivalve species.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Alcantar, Marina W
Hetrick, Jeff
Ramsay, Jacqueline
Kelley, Amanda L
spellingShingle Alcantar, Marina W
Hetrick, Jeff
Ramsay, Jacqueline
Kelley, Amanda L
Embryonic and Early Larval Development of the Pacific Razor Clam (
author_facet Alcantar, Marina W
Hetrick, Jeff
Ramsay, Jacqueline
Kelley, Amanda L
author_sort Alcantar, Marina W
title Embryonic and Early Larval Development of the Pacific Razor Clam (
title_short Embryonic and Early Larval Development of the Pacific Razor Clam (
title_full Embryonic and Early Larval Development of the Pacific Razor Clam (
title_fullStr Embryonic and Early Larval Development of the Pacific Razor Clam (
title_full_unstemmed Embryonic and Early Larval Development of the Pacific Razor Clam (
title_sort embryonic and early larval development of the pacific razor clam (
publisher Atypon
publishDate 2023
url https://doi.org/10.1086/730784
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38976852
genre sugpiaq
Alaska
genre_facet sugpiaq
Alaska
op_source Biol Bull
ISSN:1939-8697
Volume:245
Issue:2
op_relation https://doi.org/10.1086/730784
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38976852
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1086/730784
container_title The Biological Bulletin
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 57
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